4.A02

First-Year Advising Seminar: — DesignPlus: Exploring Design

Design+ is a first-year undergraduate advising seminar made up of approximately 30 first-year undergraduate students, 4 faculty advisors, and 4 or more undergraduate associate advisors.

The academic program is flexible to account for diverse student interests within the field of design, and students work with advisors to select a mix of academic and experiential opportunities.

Design+ assists incoming first-year students in their exploration of possibilities in design across MIT. 

Design+ includes a dedicated study space, kitchen, lounge, and a variety of maker spaces which offer Design+ students a second campus home for making and braking.

Design+ introduces first year undergraduate students to opportunities 
Design+ around design such as internships, international travel, and 
Design+ UROPs with some of the most exciting design labs at MIT

For registration and other administrative questions contact The Office of the First Year.

Fall
2024
2-0-4
U
Schedule
R 11-1
Location
N52-337
Can Be Repeated for Credit
No
4.A02

First-Year Advising Seminar: — DesignPlus: Exploring Design

Design+ is a first-year undergraduate advising seminar made up of approximately 30 first-year undergraduate students, 4 faculty advisors, and 4 or more undergraduate associate advisors.

The academic program is flexible to account for diverse student interests within the field of design, and students work with advisors to select a mix of academic and experiential opportunities.

Design+ assists incoming first-year students in their exploration of possibilities in design across MIT. 

Design+ includes a dedicated study space, kitchen, lounge, and a variety of maker spaces which offer Design+ students a second campus home for making and braking.

Design+ introduces first year undergraduate students to opportunities 
Design+ around design such as internships, international travel, and 
Design+ UROPs with some of the most exciting design labs at MIT

For registration and other administrative questions contact The Office of the First Year.

Fall
2023
2-0-4
U
Schedule
Lecture: T 3-5
Lab/Recitation: F 12-1
Location
N52-337
Can Be Repeated for Credit
No
4.689

Preparation for History, Theory and Criticism PhD Thesis

Required for doctoral students in HTC as a prerequisite for work on the doctoral dissertation. Prior to candidacy, doctoral students are required to write and orally defend a proposal laying out the scope of their thesis, its significance, a survey of existing research and literature, the methods of research to be adopted, a bibliography and plan of work. Work is done in consultation with HTC Faculty, in accordance with the HTC PhD Degree Program guidelines.

Advisor
Fall
2024
TBA
G
Schedule
see advisor
Prerequisites
permission of instructor
Required Of
PhD HTC
Can Be Repeated for Credit
Yes
4.685

Preparation for HTC Minor Exam

Required of doctoral students in HTC as a prerequisite for work on the doctoral dissertation. The Minor Exam focuses on a specific area of specialization through which the student might develop their particular zone of expertise. Work is done in consultation with HTC faculty, in accordance with the HTC PhD Degree Program Guidelines.

Advisor
Fall
2024
1-14-15
G
Schedule
see advisor
Prerequisites
permission of instructor
Required Of
PhD HTC
Can Be Repeated for Credit
No
4.684

Preparation for HTC Major Exam

Required of doctoral students in HTC as a prerequisite for work on the doctoral dissertation. The Major Exam covers a historically broad area of interest and includes components of history, historiography, and theory. Preparation for the exam will focus on four or five themes agreed upon in advance by the student and the examiner, and are defined by their area of teaching interest. Work is done in consultation with HTC faculty, in accordance with the HTC PhD Degree Program Guidelines.

Advisor
Fall
2024
1-0-26
G
Schedule
see advisor
Prerequisites
permission of instructor
Required Of
PhD HTC
Can Be Repeated for Credit
No
4.661

Theory and Method in the Study of Architecture and Art

Studies theoretical and historiographical works pertaining to the fields of art and architectural history. Members of seminar pursue work designed to examine their own presuppositions and methods.

MIT Certificate Protected Syllabus

Fall
2024
3-0-9
G
Schedule
T 2-5
Location
5-216
Prerequisites
permission of instructor
Required Of
SMArchS HTC, PhD HTC
Preference Given To
PhD and other advanced students
Can Be Repeated for Credit
Yes
4.647

Technopolitics, Culture, Intervention

Examines the manner in which key theories of technology have influenced architectural and art production in terms of their "humanizing" claims. Students test theories of technology on the grounds of whether technology is good or bad for humans.

MIT Certificate Protected Syllabus

Fall
2024
3-0-6
G
3-0-9
G
Schedule
T 9-12
Location
1-136
Required Of
MArch (required elective)
Enrollment
Limited to 15
Preference Given To
MArch
Can Be Repeated for Credit
No
4.624

Dwelling & Building: Cities in the Global South

This course examines the contemporary challenges and history of city planning on three continents - Africa, Asia, and South America. Students study a number of city plans, from the ‘informal’ settlements of Delhi and Nairobi, the modernist master plans of Brasilia and Baghdad, to climate action plans in various cities. The objective of the course is to understand the relationship between dwelling and building in the design of cities, in conjunction with the environmental, social, political, and intellectual environments at the time of their planning. Open to both undergraduate and graduate students. MArch students can register for 9 credits.

MIT Certificate Protected Syllabus

Fall
2024
3-0-6
G
3-0-9
G
Schedule
T 10-1
Location
5-231
Can Be Repeated for Credit
No
4.619

Historiography of Islamic Art and Architecture

Critical review of literature on Islamic art and architecture in the last two centuries. Analyzes the cultural, disciplinary, and theoretical contours of the field and highlights the major figures that have influenced its evolution. Challenges the tacit assumptions and biases of standard studies of Islamic art and architecture and addresses historiographic and critical questions concerning how knowledge of a field is defined, produced, and reproduced.

4.619 Certificated Protected Syllabus

Fall
2024
3-0-9
G
Schedule
R 2-5
Location
5-216
Prerequisites
permission of instructor
Required Of
SMArchS AKPIA, HTC
Restricted Elective
SMArchS AKPIA
Enrollment
Limited to 12
Can Be Repeated for Credit
No
4.614

Building Islam

Examines the history of Islamic architecture and culture spanning fifteen centuries on three continents - Asia, Africa, Europe. Students study a number of representative examples, from the 7th century House of the Prophet to the current high-rises of Dubai, in conjunction with their urban, social, political, and intellectual environments at the time of their construction.

MIT Certificate Protected Syllabus

Fall
2024
3-0-9
U
Schedule
TR 11-12:30
Location
5-216
Required Of
BSA
Restricted Elective
Architecture minor
Enrollment
Limited to 18
HASS
A
Can Be Repeated for Credit
No